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PNS Daily Newscast - March 21, 2019

The nation’s acting Defense Secretary is under investigation for promoting Boeing, his former employer. Also on the Thursday rundown: The Trump administration’s spending blueprint being called a “bully budget.” Plus, a call for the feds to protect consumers from abusive lenders.

Report: CA Kids Face Troubling Racial Inequity

PHOTO: A new Annie E. Casey Foundation report on obstacles to success facing children of color finds Asian students in California are more than five times as likely as African-American students to score at or above proficient in eighth-grade math, and white students are more than three times as likely as African-American students to be reading proficient in fourth grade. Credit: University of California.

April 1, 2014

LOS ANGELES - California's African-American, Latino and American Indian children lag far behind white and Asian kids when it comes to access to health and education opportunities. Those are the findings of a new Kids Count policy report from the Annie E. Casey Foundation that measured data such as birth weights, reading and math levels, and family support.

According to Laura Speer, Casey Foundation associate director, the report is valuable because the Census Bureau is projecting children of color will represent a majority of American kids by 2018, and by 2030 the majority of the U.S. labor force will be people of color.

"We think it's a really critical time for the country to focus on improving outcomes for these kids, since they really are going to be the future success of the country," Speer stated.

The report found Asian pupils in California are more than five times as likely as African-American kids to score at or above proficient in eighth-grade math, and white children are more than three times as likely as African-American pupils to be reading-proficient in fourth grade.

Ted Lempert, the president of Children Now, said a child's fourth-grade reading level is important because it's a proven indicator of success later in life.

"One of the indicators of this study is high school students graduating on time. And, one of the best predictors of that high school graduation rate is fourth-grade reading, and so it really is an early marker of how kids are faring in the education system," he said.

Lempert added that, while the results are very unsettling, the good news is that research shows state investments in high-quality programs for kids can make a difference. He said California is taking those steps with the new Local Control Funding Formula to address these racial inequities.